A sharing of ancestry stories aimed at sparking interest in the topic from an Ohioans' perspective.
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Ancestry Saturday: Generational Overlap
This obituary would have been helpful if I had found it two years earlier than I did, but it's a great confirming piece nonetheless.
Charles Harper's family is recited for three generations in here. My kids' fourth great grandfather on their mom's side had quite a 91-year life and this obit covers it well. It's as extensive as any I've seen.
It's the stories that make it even more interesting. Charles Harper's life not only tied into Ohio history but also our family history.
The obit says Harper "hewed the timber for the first Broad Street bridge in Columbus."
It's not real clear when that was, but it is quite an interesting historical tidbit nonetheless. It's made all the more interesting since my kid's grandfather worked in an office building in the early 1990's that overlooked that same bridge. He could watch the bridge be rebuilt in the 1990's from his corner office.
The obit also said, "He hewed the timber and was a contractor for a large part of the material in the old state penitentiary." That same penitentiary had a brutal fire in 1930, a major historical event in Ohio as 322 inmates perished.
Sadly, Charles Harper's great grandson, Richard Harper, was incarcerated in the old penitentiary and would die in that same fire. Richard would have been uncle to my mother-in-law, though he died before she was born.
Today, Nationwide Arena and the Arena District of Columbus sits where the old pen sat.
His fourth great grandkids have visited his grave. Now, they have some landmarks to remember him by too.
Labels:
ancestry,
Charles Harper,
family,
Ohio
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Great Obituary.
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